step one:- open systemsettings > workspace behaviour > virtual desktops: set the number of desktops you want, enable (or not) the different widgets for each desktop (this will allow you to have different plasmoids and wallpapers in every virtual desktop and give them a name (or not)step two:- right click the panel > unlock widgets- far right of the panel (the cashiew) > click it > add widgets > in the search-box type pager > drag it to whenever you like to (just be careful here because the panel is in edit mode)- when finished right-click the cashiew and lock widgets again.

Thanks, I couldn't remember the name of the widget. Usually it is enabled by default.

Great release i'm an official Mint user after having tried this KDE release... I just asked myself if we have to wait for official release to have repos fully updated, or if it's possible to upgrade them even in the RC... Right now it seems that packets like wine and other common, miss totally and others can't be installed because the RC version... Over this it seems the kernel is really good for notebooks, it has a full acpi support for all the notebook's features except for the thoshiba TOS620a accelerometer, which i can't either find any driver, if Mint could support it natively it would be really great... I was asking myself if it would be a pain in the ass to write such drivers, unluckly i'm not a programmer but i guess it would not be that hard to write ACPI drivers...

Lord_Eager,1- is the system updated (when prompted by mintupdate?)2- apart from wine what other packages are missing (according to your findings?)3- if you open package manage (synaptic), do a search for wine and mark it for installation what happens? any error? any conflict? (of course after following point 1)

Actually the maya dir does not exist, i gues that is still work in progress, hoever till it's created it's enough adding the precise eqivalent addresses, and it works fine.

System works fine on almost all aspects now (now even thermal sensors work fine), excpet for the accelerometer driver, and HD protection which is really important for a netbook, and it seems almost impossible to find anything on all web concerning...I have found a directory actually

/sys/devices/LNXSYSTM:00/device:00/TOS620A:00

but all files inside have no useful informations and there is no really any module that can be loaded into kernel... I ask myself if anyone has ever been able to use a 3d accelerometer Toshiba on a Linux distro...

ahh i see that is an old bug that should be eradicated by now: the proper ubuntu entries are replaced by faulty maya ones in the relevant ubuntu repos;just FYI the repos are there (you can check that booting the liveDVD and typing inxi -r in the terminal), they were just messed up after installation (i couldn't reproduce that in my installation).

I see, i have to install the release on an asus netbook tomorrow, i will check to see if in the live DVD, repos are correct, to be sure that the bug comes after the install... However from your words i assume that the maya dir are never going to exist on ubuntu servers ...Have you any suggest, of any place where to find particular hardware drivers on web even sources would be useful... i know other people with IBM or ls302d acceloremeters have working drivers on linux, i assume somewhere must be there some developer that managed to code some driver for the TOS602A...

Release Candidate. In testing now. Final release expected soon. This particular RC is very stable, actually. I've been using it with no problems, but once it is announced as Final, you should see it on the LM web site.

The team is proud to announce the release of Linux Mint 13 KDE RC. Linux Mint 13 KDE New features at a glance: KDE 4.8 Artwork improvements Search engines For a complete overview and to see screenshots of the new features, visit: “What’s new in Linux Mint 13 KDE“. Important info: Quicktime playback in Firefox [...]

Thanks Clem, running it here on a crummy WD Green hard drive and it works great. Been using it as my main OS the last few days. I wish I had looked into those "green" drives before I wasted money on them. They are very quiet, but also very slow.BTW, virtual desktops seem to be MIA.

yup, that's why they are quiet and produce less heat, because they are so god dam slow. fine for overnight backing up purposes, totally useless for general use unless your computer was slow to start withI too fell into the trap thinking it would be slightly cheaper to run and they claimed it didn't suffer any major speed loss. Yeah right!!!